Re: Eric Janszen Interviewed on CNBC today January 25, 2008 at 2:20 PM Eastern
GRG, I hear you. Many say that dollar devaluation is making the US the exporter of choice, hence you hear many stock gurus recommend those US companies with heavy global and/or export exposure.
We had a discussion on a thread here many months ago about this and the general consensus was that the labor cost advantage in emerging economies would far outweigh any currency advantage. Steve Forbes has been recently pounding Bush for his weak dollar policy. Forbes says a weak dollar does not translate into a strong economy.
As for exec. compensation, airline pilots are usually immune to cost pressures until their respective companies exercise bankruptcy. Recently pilots for the big US carriers have gotten whacked with 50%+ pay cuts. Their excess bargaining power simply disappeared. Now don't get me wrong, I am no socialist and I know how emotionally straining it is to be an exec at a publicly traded corporation especially post Sarbanes-Oxley but it seems to me the executive foxes on the compensation committees are guarding the henhouse justifying excessive compensation packages.
To your point, compared to other internal costs executive compensation is minimal, execs have freedom to move to other companies and since they do have excess bargaining power, even the most ardent shareholder rights advocates figure its not worth the fight.
PS: Sorry for the thread drift.
GRG, I hear you. Many say that dollar devaluation is making the US the exporter of choice, hence you hear many stock gurus recommend those US companies with heavy global and/or export exposure.
We had a discussion on a thread here many months ago about this and the general consensus was that the labor cost advantage in emerging economies would far outweigh any currency advantage. Steve Forbes has been recently pounding Bush for his weak dollar policy. Forbes says a weak dollar does not translate into a strong economy.
As for exec. compensation, airline pilots are usually immune to cost pressures until their respective companies exercise bankruptcy. Recently pilots for the big US carriers have gotten whacked with 50%+ pay cuts. Their excess bargaining power simply disappeared. Now don't get me wrong, I am no socialist and I know how emotionally straining it is to be an exec at a publicly traded corporation especially post Sarbanes-Oxley but it seems to me the executive foxes on the compensation committees are guarding the henhouse justifying excessive compensation packages.
To your point, compared to other internal costs executive compensation is minimal, execs have freedom to move to other companies and since they do have excess bargaining power, even the most ardent shareholder rights advocates figure its not worth the fight.
PS: Sorry for the thread drift.
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